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LL-37

Cathelicidin, hCAP-18, FALL-39, CAP-18

Quick Stats
Studies 2230
Trials 95
Score 3
2010 pubmed 64 citations

Differential expression of antimicrobial peptides in margins of chronic wounds.

Dressel. Stefanie S; Harder. Jürgen J; Cordes. Jesko J; Wittersheim. Maike M; Meyer-Hoffert. Ulf U; Sunderkötter. Cord C; Gläser. Regine R

Key Findings

  • Psoriasin and hBD‑2 are strongly increased in chronic wound margins compared to healthy skin
  • LL‑37 and RNase 7 are largely absent in the epidermis of chronic wounds
  • No link was found between the type of bacteria present and the levels of these antimicrobial peptides

Practical Outcomes

  • Because LL‑37 is low where healing is stalled, biohackers might consider topical LL‑37 supplements or peptide‑based dressings to support wound repair. However, the study provides only a mechanistic hint, not dosage or safety data, so any use should be experimental and monitored.

Summary

The study looked at which natural antimicrobial proteins are present in the edges of long‑lasting skin ulcers. It found that some proteins (psoriasin and hBD‑2) are high, while others that help healing, especially LL‑37, are almost missing. This suggests that adding LL‑37 could help chronic wounds heal, but the research didn’t test any treatments yet.

Abstract

Skin wounds usually heal without major infections, although the loss of the mechanical epithelial barrier exposes the tissue to various bacteria. One reason may be the expression of antimicrobial peptides (AMP) of which some [human beta-defensins (hBD) and LL-37] were recently shown to support additionally certain steps of wound healing. There are no studies which have compared expression patterns of different classes of AMP in chronic wounds. The aim of our study was therefore to analyse the expression profile of hBD-2, hBD-3, LL-37, psoriasin and RNase 7 by immunohistochemistry from defined wound margins of chronic venous ulcers. We detected a strong induction of psoriasin and hBD-2 in chronic wounds in comparison with healthy skin. Except for stratum corneum, no expression of RNase 7 and LL-37 was detected in the epidermis while expression of hBD-3 was heterogeneous. Bacterial swabs identified Staphylococcus aureus and additional bacterial populations, but no association between colonization and AMP expression was found. The differential expression of AMP is noteworthy considering the high bacterial load of chronic ulcers. Clinically, supplementation of AMP with the capability to enhance wound healing besides restricting bacterial overgrowth could present a physiological support for treatment of disturbed wound healing.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2010

Date

2010-01-19T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1111/j.1600-0625.2009.01030.x

Citations

64

References

24